| simona dumitriu on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 21:12:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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| [Nettime-ro] Impermanence la Hendershot Gallery New York |
Press Release
IMPERMANENCE
Hendershot Gallery
April 29 â
June 10, 2010
Opening reception April 29, 6-8 pm
April 15, 2010, New York - Hendershot Gallery, in conjunction with
MB Art Agency, Amsterdam, and C-Projects, Beijing, is pleased to present
Impermanence. The group exhibition, which includes the work
ofÂBoukje Janssen, Iosef KirÃly, Sanja Medic, Ana Maria Micu, CÄtÄlin
PetriÅor, Victor RÄcÄtÄu, Kathrin Schlegel, Vera Weissgerber, and Carine
Weve, will be open to the public from April 29 until June 10, 2010.
Impermanence presents the work of four Romanian artists of
different generations, and five artists from Holland, Serbia, Germany,
and Luxembourg. The show intends to create a special platform where
similar artistic sentiments and aesthetic approaches can flourish in an
international dialogue.
The notion of impermanence, of a shifting world in flux, has taken on
a profound meaning in the post-war period, one that is particularly
timely in the international climate of the post-9/11 world. In Eastern
Europe, especially in post-communist countries such as Romania,
âimpermanenceâ characterizes a common feeling of fatalism, uncertainty,
and endemic precariousness. In Western Europe and America, the same
notion evokes a sense of liberation as well as anxiety, for it
represents the possibility of escape from the rigidity of formerly fixed
social, cultural and political meanings, paradigms that have been
rendered ambiguous, if not null and void, by the upheaval of recent
history.
Having approached the forefront of the art world in recent years,
contemporary Romanian art has gained exposure and momentum through major
gallery and museum exhibitions, as well as through the efforts of
curators such as Maria Rus Bojan, who has been instrumental in the
collaborative organization of this show. Generally characterized by the
smoldering aesthetic darkness of its pared-down realism, contemporary
Romanian art is most often discussed in political terms, with curators,
critics, and viewers attributing the contemporary Romanian creative
impetus to the turmoil of the countryâs turbulent, violent history;
Romaniaâs clichà past appears to overshadow its present on the global
stage. While such a view may be partially valid, to restrict the
assessment of contemporary Romanian art entirely to such cultural
specificity is to clip its wings. To this end, Impermanence
proposes the productive and worthwhile use of a more universal lens in
the (re)consideration of contemporary Romanian art by placing it in a
pertinent dialogue with works that arise out of different European
cultures, but which ultimately share a common creative interest.
The desire to reflect on time, the past, and its inevitable effects
on the human condition has deep roots in the history of artistic
production, and will arguably remain a constant in the equation of human
experience forever. The works presented in this exhibition, produced by
contemporary artists of disparate backgrounds and wrought in a variety
of materials, treat the universality of this fundamental notion with
poetic modesty. They present a vision of the dichotomy of time â of the
ephemeral and the permanent â that is characterized by a quiet,
introspective profundity. The final product, then, is a timely artistic
discussion of this shifting, changing historical moment, and its effects
on the creative pursuits of the artists represented here. What ensues
is an aesthetic contemplation of the inevitable presence of the past and
the ambiguous impermanence of the present.
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